[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
488 MALEKULA Lambumbu Further north, in Lambumbu, however, there is a ceremony called nimbaghai or nimbarhai which resembles the nivopvvwien of the south-west. It seems that although every woman must at some time during her life undergo this ceremony, it is not necessary for her to do so before her marriage. Indeed, sometimes a mother and daughter may have their teeth knocked out at the same time, but it is considered an asset if the operation has been done before marriage, and it was stated that for such a girl a man would be expected to give considerably more in bride-wealth than he would were he marrying one who had not passed through nimbaghai. Usually several girls or women will undergo this rite together, but this is not invariably so. When a man has decided that it is time for his wife or daughters to be operated upon he plants a special yam garden, and when the tubers are ready for eating he appoints a day for nimbaghai to be held. He then builds a hut like an open shed close to his own house. This hut is called m'um lï¬Åmbwar. Some ï¬Åve days after it is ï¬Ånished the girl begins to observe those restrictions and tabus which are associated with the word v1'l1/all She may not have anything to do with salt water—either directly or indirectly~she may not eat coco-nuts or pigs and she may drink no water. Further, she has to be careful when she goes out of doors not to step over a tree root, since it is believed that were she to do so her incisor teeth would be very diflicult to extract and her jaw might even be broken in the effort to knock them out. After about another ï¬Åve days the girl is secluded in the nium wmbwar and here she remains for four days and nights, still observing her tabus. At the end of the fourth day the ceremony of nimbaghai is introduced with a dance. We do not know who partakes in it ; whether visitors from other villages are invited for the occasion, nor whether men as well as women are present. The dance takes place during the night and on the following morning the candidate has her teeth removed. This is done by an old woman skilled in the art, who is called nimugh luau. She takes a leaf of the native cabbage (nuhuver) and rubs the girl's gums with it, after which she hammers out the teeth in the same Way as that employed in Seniang. Close 1 For the tabus and restrictions involved in the word mu, see below, Chapter xxm, 1